High Fidelity is the story of one Rob Fleming who has been a few things in his life but most men wouldn't really be proud of those things. Told in the first person, this is an unashamed and unflinching tale about one man's journey from boy to man (in the space of a few months). What Hornby tells us in this book is what our mothers already know and what the women we date find out quickly enough - sometimes (most of the time) we're scared to grow up. The lead character in this story is the owner of a record store called Championship Vinyl and while he has top five lists for almost all forms of music and all sorts of sub-themes within the scope of his musical fanaticism, he would be hard pressed to find five nice things to say to your girlfriend when you've made her mad.
There are some interesting pieces of serial male fantasy in here and some hard-hitting pieces of truth we run away from facing each day. What the reviewers of this book seem to have thought of as funny, I just find frightening because I know I can be like the man described in High Fidelity and that is not a thought that allows one to sleep at night (thus this review is being written at the cost of much needed sleep).
From his two mates in the record store, Barry and ****, to his girlfriend Laura, her friend Liz, the singer Marie La Salle and the other assorted hangers-on that the authors describes to the tone of the book itself, I got the sense that this was life unfolding before my eyes, between the pages of a paperback novel and that, for me, defines the magic of this book.
In the art that I absorb, be it film, music, books or anything else, things are always happening and there is a constant state of action but while reading High Fidelity I got the sense that it was like being in conversation with a guy - he told me a lot of stuff but it was all stuff he wanted to tell. This could be a stranger in a bar or my neighbour on a train and I only know what he told me.
I salute the writer of High Fidelity for the pun in the book's title and for the way he has been able to recreate everyday life.
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